All stories by Chris Jones on BroadwayStars

Sunday, February 12, 2017

'Straight White Men': Young Jean Lee asks audience, herself to see both sides by Chris Jones

Consider, dear reader, this paradoxical truth from the restless mind of the auteur artist Young Jean Lee, currently accessible in Chicago through the Steppenwolf Theatre Company: "There is n…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:53PM
Friday, February 10, 2017

Blue Man Group: Still silent, still pulling in audiences at Briar Street by Chris Jones

"Blue Man Group" has been running at the Briar Street Theatre in Chicago since 1997, a run of almost 20 years. In this city, in any city, that's a remarkable achievement. But here's what is …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:20PM

As Wrigleyville booms, the Uptown is left in the dust by Chris Jones

On the day following her stellar halftime performance at the Super Bowl, Lady Gaga, announced a new world tour, dubbed "Joanne," including an August date at Wrigley Field. Her ladyship will …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 09:42AM
Thursday, February 9, 2017

Review: Glenn Close is scary good in 'Sunset Boulevard' on Broadway by Chris Jones

When Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical version of "Sunset Boulevard" first opened at London's Adelphi Theatre in 1993, audiences were dazzled by John Napier's gilded re-creation of Norma Desmond…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:00PM

Mike Myers will star in movie about his mentor Del Close, Chicago improv guru by Chris Jones

Mike Myers, the actor who starred in "Wayne's World," "Austin Powers" and on "Saturday Night Live!" and whose career began at Second City, will play the role of the real-life improv guru Del…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:15PM
Wednesday, February 8, 2017

'Scottsboro Boys' never given a moment to rest at Porchlight by Chris Jones

Between the Broadway opening of John Kander and Fred Ebb's "The Scottsboro Boys," and Tuesday night's Chicago premiere from Porchlight Music Theatre, more than six years have elapsed. This h…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:52PM

Could Young Jean Lee really be on the side of straight white men? by Chris Jones

Young Jean Lee looks me in the eye and smiles her most sympathetic smile. "I feel sorry for you," she says. "You don't get to have one of the big categories of oppression. You are expected t…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 02:28PM
Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Review: Manual Cinema's 'Magic City' lets everyone in by Chris Jones

Border walls are crumbling at theaters all over town these days, the Trump-mandated edifice being the metaphor du jour for a political revolution sourced in protectionism and thus anathema t…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:45PM
Monday, February 6, 2017

'Faceless': Much to like in young writer's lively but formulaic courtroom drama by Chris Jones

"Faceless," the lively new drama at Northlight Theatre that deals with the recruitment — over Twitter and Facebook — of a young American woman to join the jihad, is the work of 22-year-o…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:16PM
Sunday, February 5, 2017

'Get out': Holocaust play 'Book of Joseph' begins with real-life letters by Chris Jones

Some Jewish people saw the Holocaust coming with total clarity — they understood almost immediately the pull of fascism and the weakness of the opposition. They decoded the fake news. Othe…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:37PM
Friday, February 3, 2017

'Salute to Tony Bennett' is a night out for you and your valentine by Chris Jones

The new revue at the Mercury Theater, "I Left My Heart: A Salute to the Music of Tony Bennett" delivers exactly what it promises — a simple, irony-free, enjoyable, predictable exploration …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:00PM

Memo to Trump: Don't kill the NEA. Fix it. by Chris Jones

To: Donald J. Trump, 45th president of the United States From: Chris Jones, Tribune critic Re: The National Endowment for the Arts A modest proposal, Mr. President: Don't kill the National E…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Thursday, February 2, 2017

Review: 'Bodyguard' needs at least to try to make sense of the movie by Chris Jones

"What are you doing here?" asked an acquaintance during intermission at the Oriental Theatre on Wednesday night. "It's my job," I replied. "More interestingly, what are you doing here?" "Ham…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:05PM

Cancer, climate change and sex crimes? These plays took some guts by Chris Jones

Over the past week, I've reviewed plays about cancer, climate change and sex offenders. Doesn't that make you want to rush out to the theater? Well, there was also "Saturday Night Fever," al…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 08:48AM
Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Wayne Brady in 'Hamilton' is a very interesting 'work in progress' by Chris Jones

It is now impossible to watch George Washington make his exit from public life in "Hamilton" without the face of Barack Obama staring back at you from the stage. It's not just that the first…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:03PM
Tuesday, January 31, 2017

'The Nether': Are there sex crimes in a virtual world? A Red Orchid struggles with answer by Chris Jones

There's a legitimate school of rehabilitative thought that says many sex offenders can't change their impulses — they only can learn to self-regulate their behavior and understand how cons…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:49PM
Monday, January 30, 2017

'Wit,' about professor with cancer, is best play ever written on the subject by Chris Jones

Margaret Edson's "Wit," which won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1999, is the best play ever written about cancer. In fact, I'd say it's the best play ever written about hospitals, too, and…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:25PM
Sunday, January 29, 2017

Review: 'Earthquakes in London' a very personal play about the whole planet by Chris Jones

There is much to worry about at present. Attending Mike Bartlett's sprawling, three-hour drama "Earthquakes in London" at the Steep Theatre, and you should, for it is a wild, trippy fusion o…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 02:48PM
Friday, January 27, 2017

Review: 'Saturday Night Fever' not just a retro disco inferno by Chris Jones

Amnesia — willful or otherwise — about what transpired in the late 1970s is hardly uncommon. Perhaps that explains why so many people think "Saturday Night Fever," the Robert Stigwood ep…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:11PM

Writers Theatre will stage pre-Broadway 'Trevor: The Musical' by Chris Jones

Writers Theatre in Glencoe will stage the world premiere of "Trevor: The Musical" in a pre-Broadway tryout this fall, the Tribune has learned. This will be the first pre-Broadway show for th…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 10:24AM

How 'Fences' built 'Moonlight,' now its rival for an Oscar by Chris Jones

In 2004, iconic American playwright August Wilson was awarded the Tribune's Literary Prize at a fall ceremony, part of the Chicago Humanities Festival. Halfway through the lunch that followe…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Thursday, January 26, 2017

Want to see a complicated play? 'Temperamentals' to 'Number' by Chris Jones

The brilliant playwright Richard Nelson recently said a couple of very smart things in Australia. One was that a great writer can look at families and, if that writer really digs deep, find …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM
Wednesday, January 25, 2017

'The Project(s)' will be back in joint project with the National Public Housing Museum by Chris Jones

"The Project(s)," the emotional, political and critically acclaimed theater piece created by the late PJ Paparelli that detailed the history of public housing in Chicago, is to have a futur…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 06:15PM

Real basketball, but Depression-era story 'Tall Girls' falls short by Chris Jones

One frequent problem with plays about sports is that you rarely see the game at the heart of the story. Lots of these dramas get stuck in locker rooms, offices or classrooms. It's very hard …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:17PM
Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Review: Rising up from their cubicles in brilliant 'Gloria' at the Goodman Theatre by Chris Jones

In the lobby of a theater the other day, an acquaintance of mine observed that the only good thing about the rise to power of Donald J. Trump was the post-facto unification of, well, let's c…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 04:03PM
Monday, January 23, 2017

Dazzling 'Diamond Dogs' needs to let us join the adventure by Chris Jones

Alastair Reynolds, a British astrophysicist who turned his hand to penning fiction, writes what is known as "hard sci-fi," or, yet more intensely, "dark, hard sci-fi." The term — which you…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:47PM

'The Temperamentals,' about a 1950s gay rights group, is an emotional night of theater by Chris Jones

The Stonewall riots of June 1969, wherein the patrons of the Stonewall Inn in New York's Greenwich Village decided to fight back against police raids that had become routine, is justly seen …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:31PM

Wayne Brady injured at 'Hamilton' matinee by Chris Jones

The actor Wayne Brady, who plays Aaron Burr in the Chicago production of "Hamilton," sustained a minor leg injury Saturday during a matinee performance of the show in downtown Chicago and …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 01:34PM
Sunday, January 22, 2017

In 'Blues,' finding their own paths through the Harlem Renaissance by Chris Jones

There is one consistent quality in the work of director Ron OJ Parson, the man behind the Court Theatre revival of Pearl Cleage's "Blues for an Alabama Sky," to value above all else right no…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 12:49PM
Friday, January 20, 2017

Review: In 'Chiflon,' down a mine with a puppet and believing every moment by Chris Jones

Most puppets have big personalities. It's an art with roots on the streets — you have to talk up a storm to draw a crowd to pass the hat. But the puppets that drew a packed, rapt house at …

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 03:06PM

Why only 'Hamilton' feels free to get political by Chris Jones

As President-elect Donald J. Trump morphed into the 45th president of the United States on Friday, arts organizations, especially the big ones, were tying themselves in knots trying to figur…

SOURCE: Chicago Tribune Subscription at 07:00AM